Clipper Decompiler [TRUSTED]

A researcher pastes the bytecode into Clipper. Within seconds, the tool returns a structured output:

While the name might evoke images of a fast crypto-wallet or a low-latency DEX, in the niche arena of blockchain security, Clipper is emerging as the sharpest scalpel for cutting through the opaque armor of bytecode. To understand why Clipper matters, you have to understand the pain of reading raw EVM bytecode. When a Solidity developer compiles a smart contract, it turns into a sequence of 60-byte opcodes: PUSH1 , MSTORE , SLOAD , DUP2 . clipper decompiler

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The EVM is stack-based and untyped. A uint256 looks exactly the same as an address or a bytes32 to the machine. Clipper employs heuristic taint analysis to guess types. If a value is used in CALL (the opcode for sending ETH), Clipper flags it as an address payable . If a variable is used in EXP , it is likely a power. This recovery turns var1 + var2 into userBalance + withdrawalAmount . A researcher pastes the bytecode into Clipper

Unlike naive decompilers that linearize jumps, Clipper uses a graph-theoretic approach to identify loops, if-else branches, and switch cases. Where older tools give you a flat list of operations, Clipper gives you a flowchart. This is vital when tracing how a malicious actor drains funds in a re-entrancy attack. When a Solidity developer compiles a smart contract,

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Clipper is to EVM reverse-engineering what the microscope was to biology. It doesn't create new dangers; it merely illuminates the ones that have always existed in the dark. For anyone serious about blockchain security, Clipper isn't just a nice-to-have tool—it is the new standard of care.